Collaborative ticketing system

ABSTRACT

Features are disclosed relating to a collaborative ticketing system that manages various aspects of ticketing for events (e.g., movies, concerts, sporting events, and the like) using knowledge about the contacts, friends, and other social connections of system users. The collaborative ticketing system may generate dynamic ticket offers that are based on the number of friends, invited by users, ultimately obtaining tickets. The collaborative ticketing system can also streamline the procurement of concessions and other event-related items by allowing users to pre-purchase such items (e.g., in connection with ticket offers), and then pick up the items at the event venue with little or no wait. In addition, users can preview event-related content (e.g., movie trailers) for event providers (e.g., movie studios), and answer questions or otherwise provide feedback about the event-related content in return for special offers, rewards, and other considerations.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional PatentApplication No. 62/082,498, filed Nov. 20, 2014, the contents of whichare incorporated by reference herein.

BACKGROUND

Ticketing services allow users to obtain information regarding events,such as movies, concerts, sporting contests, performances, and the like,and to purchase tickets for those events. In a common implementation, aticketing service provides a web-based or telephonic interface thatallows users to select events, determine whether tickets are available(and, if reserved seating is used for the event, which seats areavailable). Users can then complete the purchase of one or more ticketsfor the event (e.g., for family and/or friends), purchase tickets foradditional events, and the like.

Some ticketing services allow a user to obtain information about anevent together with information regarding whether any friends of theuser have also purchased tickets to the event. For example, users mayregister for a ticketing service and self-identify as friends. Users canthen access information about which friends are attending an event, andusers can use that information to decide whether to attend the eventindividually or purchase tickets near the user's friends.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

Throughout the drawings, reference numbers may be re-used to indicatecorrespondence between referenced elements. The drawings are provided toillustrate example embodiments described herein and are not intended tolimit the scope of the disclosure.

FIG. 1 illustrates a network environment with a collaborative ticketingsystem, user devices, and various servers and devices according to someembodiments.

FIG. 2 illustrates an example collaborative ticketing system accordingto some embodiments.

FIG. 3 illustrates an example user device according to some embodiments.

FIG. 4 illustrates an example venue kiosk according to some embodiments.

FIG. 5 illustrates example data flows and interactions between userdevices, a collaborative ticketing system, and a venue management serveraccording to some embodiments.

FIG. 6 illustrates additional example data flows and interactionsbetween user devices, a collaborative ticketing system, and a venuemanagement server according to some embodiments.

FIG. 7 illustrates example data flows and interactions between a userdevice, venue kiosk, collaborative ticketing system, and venuemanagement server according to some embodiments.

FIG. 8 illustrates example data flows and interactions between a userdevice, collaborative ticketing system, and event provider serveraccording to some embodiments.

FIG. 9 is a flow diagram of an illustrative process for generating eventoffers content page according to some embodiments.

FIG. 10 is a flow diagram of an illustrative process for processingevent orders and invitations according to some embodiments.

FIGS. 11A-11C illustrate user interface screens for viewing eventdetails according to some embodiments.

FIGS. 12A-12C illustrate additional user interface screens for viewingevent details according to some embodiments.

FIGS. 13A-13I illustrate user interface screens for ordering eventtickets according to some embodiments.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS

Introduction

The present disclosure is directed a collaborative ticketing system thatmanages various aspects of ticketing for events (e.g., movies, concerts,sporting events, and the like) using knowledge about the contacts,friends, and other social connections of system users. The collaborativeticketing system may generate offers for users, and the ticket priceseventually paid by the users may be reduced when friends, invited by theusers, also purchase tickets. The collaborative ticketing system canalso streamline the purchase and procurement of concessions and otherevent-related items by allowing users to pre-purchase such items (e.g.,in connection with ticket offers), and then pick up the items at theevent venue with little or no wait. In addition, users can previewevent-related content (e.g., movie trailers) for event providers (e.g.,movie studios), and answer questions or otherwise provide feedback aboutthe event-related content in return for special offers, rewards, andother considerations. The collaborative ticketing system can track anyor all aspects of event browsing, previewing, ordering, and attendance,along with the social connections associated therewith, and can generatedata and reports useful in, e.g., creation of future offers, previews,and the like.

Some conventional ticketing services allow a user to obtain informationabout an event together with information regarding whether any friendsof the user have also purchased tickets to the event. The user can thendecide whether to attend the event individually or purchase tickets nearthe user's friends. The user may also be allowed to purchase blocks oftickets and then share the purchased tickets with friends. However, suchconventional services do not recommend events and/or friends to inviteto events based on observed event-related behaviors of the user and thefriends (e.g., browsing events, viewing previews or other event-relatedcontent, attending events with other users, etc.), nor do suchconventional services offer variable pricing based upon the invitedfriends that subsequently purchase tickets. Rather, users are passivelyshown a listing of friends that have also purchased tickets to theevent, and the users are enabled to purchase tickets near those friends.

Some aspects of the present disclosure relate to the generation andmanagement of ticket offers based on determined user preferences, socialconnections, event characteristics, and/or other user-related orevent-related information. Ticket offers may include various parameters,such as a list price that corresponds to the price of the ticketsindependent of any special offer, a base price that corresponds to thestarting price of the tickets in connection with the offer, a discountamount or function that corresponds to the discount applied to offeredtickets when friends also purchase tickets, and, in some cases, a floorthat corresponds to the lowest amount the tickets will be sold for inconnection with the offer. Accordingly, users are encouraged to invitefriends to the events in order to obtain the maximum benefit from theoffers. In addition, users may be more likely to attend an event ingeneral when the user actively invites friends to the event or isinvited by friends attending the event. Thus, a collaborative ticketingsystem implementing offers tied to or otherwise based on the socialconnections of users and the conversion of those connections into ticketsales can increase overall ticketing sales and revenue in comparisonwith a system that passively indicates which friends have purchasedtickets to an event of interest.

Users may also purchase concessions or other event-related items inconnection with the purchase of tickets. For example, a particular userpurchasing tickets to a movie may typically buy popcorn and a beverageat the movie theater to consume while watching the movie. Using thecollaborative ticketing system, the user can pre-purchase theconcessions with the movie ticket, and may in some cases get a furtherdiscount on the concessions and/or ticket. In addition, oralternatively, the concession stand at the theater may receive anotification when the user arrives at the event (e.g., when the userscans an e-ticket or uses near-field communication at a theater kiosk).Concession stand employees may then prepare the pre-purchasedconcessions and have them ready for pickup when the user arrives at theconcession stand. In this way, the user can save time by avoidingpayment lines and other potential delays associated with in-personordering of concessions. In addition, the concession stands can moreefficiently and effectively plan for expected demand by having advanceaccess to information about pre-paid concession sales tied to particulartickets.

Additional aspects of the disclosure relate to methods of generatingoffers and/or determining ticket pricing for the offers. Thecollaborative ticketing system may obtain information from eventproviders (e.g., movie studios, movie distributors, event promoters, orother event producers), event venues (e.g., movie theaters, concerthalls, stadiums, or other event host locations), and the like. Suchinformation may be used to determine ticket pricing and generate offers.In some embodiments, prices may be determined based on analysis ofmultiple (e.g., two or more) variables, such as the date of the showingrelative to the initial release of the movie, historical sales ofsimilar tickets, market-based factors, competing movies, movie studioand/or theater desire for incremental sales, and the like. For example,a popular movie with little competition near the beginning of itstheater run may be discounted lightly from the list price, if at all,and little or no discount may be given for friends also purchasingtickets. However, a less popular movie with much competition near theend of its theater run in a relatively lower-price geographic region maybe discounted deeply, and aggressive additional discounts may be offeredfor each friend that purchases a ticket, for concessions purchased inconnection with the event, etc. In addition, if the movie studio thatproduced the movie and/or the theater at which the movie is showing isprimarily interested in marginal sales at the end of the movie's run intheaters, the collaborative ticketing system may generate bundled offersthat include tickets and concessions for a single price, and the revenuefrom such bundled offers may be intelligently split among the moviestudio and movie theater to increase overall profits by virtue of themarginal ticket sale and additional concession revenue.

Further aspects of the present disclosure relate to generation ofinvitations, such as user-initiated invitations or polls to friends, toorganize group outings to events. Invitations may also or alternativelybe generated automatically according to the determined preferences ofindividual users, social connections between users, characteristics ofthe events to which the invitations pertain, environmental information,information from third-party sources, and the like. In some embodiments,a user may select or otherwise express interest in multiple eventsand/or offers, and may wish to purchase one of the tickets/offersdepending upon the availability and input of friends. The user mayselect and/or be recommended friends whom may also be interested in theevents or offers, and those friends can be invited to participate in apoll. After the voting is complete (or in response to some other event,such as the expiration of a period of time), the event or offer with themost votes may be chosen, and the various users can proceed to purchasetickets if desired. As another example, geo-location information may beobtained by the collaborative ticketing system for a group of friends.The geo-location information may indicate that the individuals arecurrently near a movie theater. The collaborative ticketing system maydetermine that the theater has an upcoming showing of a movie in whichsome or all of the friends have shown an interest (e.g., via favorablefeedback regarding a preview, interest in or previous attendance atsimilar movies, etc.). Furthermore, the collaborative ticketing systemmay determine that there is adverse weather in the area (e.g., highheat, expected precipitation, etc.). Based on any or all of thesefactors, the collaborative ticketing system can generate an invitationto the users, including an offer to see the movie at a discount thatincreases with the total number of friends that purchase a ticket, thepurchase of concessions, and/or other factors. The collaborativeticketing system may also or alternatively generate concessions offers,offers for combinations of concessions and tickets, etc. in response todetermining that a user or group of users is within geographic proximityof a venue.

Still further aspects of the present disclosure relate to providingevent previews and soliciting feedback regarding the event previews.Users may be shown movie trailers or other event previews provided bymovie studios or other event producers, and the users can be prompted toprovide feedback regarding the previews. Event producers can use suchfeedback information to test the effectiveness of different versions ofpreviews, test the interest level of particular user groups (e.g.,demographics) in particular preview versions, test the interest level inparticular events relative to competing events, etc. In addition, thecollaborative ticketing system can collect the user feedback informationto develop user profiles or determine user preferences. Such userpreferences may be useful in determining which movies and other eventsto recommend to the user, which invitations to automatically generate,which friends to recommend for particular events, etc.

Yet further aspects of the disclosure relate to user interface featuresthat provide users with an intuitive ticketing experience. In someembodiments, a graphical user interface may be generated on a userdevice, and a user of the device can browse events and offers, configureinvitations, and the like using the interface. The interface may includea dynamic control, such as a “wheel” with multiple regions. The regionsmay correspond to different event categories, different offer types,some combination thereof, etc. In addition, the sizes of the regionswith respect to one another may be based on the relative importance tothe user or strength of correlation to the user, the amount of contentassociated with the regions, etc.

Although aspects of the embodiments described in the disclosure willfocus, for the purpose of illustration, on ticketing for movies shown atmovie theaters and for concessions offered at movie theaters, oneskilled in the art will appreciate that the features disclosed hereinmay be applied to any number of other events occurring at venues. Forexample, the features disclosed herein may be applied to concerts,sporting events, expositions, performances, and other entertainmentevents to which multiple attendees purchase tickets, other types ofmerchandise at such events, etc. Such events may occur at varioustheaters, sporting arenas, convention centers, parks, etc.

Various aspects of the disclosure will now be described with regard tocertain examples and embodiments, which are intended to illustrate butnot limit the disclosure.

Network Ticketing Environment and System Components

FIG. 1 illustrates an example network environment in which features canbe implemented for providing collaborative ticketing for events, such asmovies, concerts, sporting events, and the like. The network environmentcan include various devices, systems, services, and the like incommunication via one or more networks 120. The network 120 may be apublicly accessible network of linked networks, possibly operated byvarious distinct parties, such as the Internet. In other embodiments,the network 120 may include a private network, personal area network,local area network, wide area network, cable network, satellite network,cellular telephone network, etc. or combination thereof, any or all ofwhich may or may not have access to and/or from the Internet.

As shown, the network environment can include: a collaborative ticketingsystem 100 to manage ticket pricing and ordering, event previews andinvitations to friends, and other processes; event provider servers 102to provide information about events, such as information about moviesand movie previews, and to receive information from the collaborativeticketing system 100, such as information about ticket sales and userreactions to previews; venue management servers 104 to provideinformation about the dates, times, and locations at which events are tooccur, and to receive information from the collaborative ticketingsystem 100 about ticket orders and related purchases such asconcessions; venue kiosks 106 to provide information about usercheck-ins with purchased tickets; third-party event information servers108 to provide event-related information, such as movie reviews andvenue reviews; social network servers 110 to provide information aboutsocial connections and other relevant social information, such as userprofiles and the identity of users' friends; and user devices 112 thatmay be used by users to view event offers, place orders, generateinvitations, view previews, and the like. Illustratively, a user of auser device 112 may interact with a mobile ticketing application 114executing on the user devices 112 to perform various collaborativeticketing functions described herein. Alternatively, or in addition, auser may interact with a browser-based interface to perform the variouscollaborative ticketing functions, such as content site (e.g., a “website” with various “web pages”), a hosted application, or some otherinterface provided by the collaborative ticketing system and accessedvia a browser application executing on the user device 112.

The devices, entities, services and features described above areillustrative only, and are not intended to be limiting. Any or all ofthe devices, entities, services and the like described above and shownin FIG. 1 may perform fewer, additional, and/or alternative functions.In some embodiments, fewer, additional, and/or alternative devices,entities, and services may be part of or otherwise associated with anetworked collaborative ticketing environment.

As will be appreciated by those of skill in the relevant art, thenetwork environment may include any number of distinct event providerservers 102, venue management servers 104, venue kiosks 106, eventinformation servers 108, social network servers 110, and user devices112. In addition, multiple (e.g., two or more) collaborative ticketingsystems 100 may be used. For example, separate collaborative ticketingsystems 100 may be located so that they are close (in either ageographical or networking sense) to groups of current or potential userdevices 112 or venue management servers 104. In such a configuration, auser device 112 may establish communications with the collaborativeticketing system 100 to which it is closest, rather than all userdevices 112 requesting content via a collaborative ticketing system 100.Illustratively, the event provider servers 102, venue servers 104, eventinformation servers 108, and social servers 110 may each correspond tological associations of one or more computing devices configured toprovide information and functionality described herein.

FIG. 2 shows an illustrative collaborative ticketing system 100. Thecollaborative ticketing system 100 can be a physical server or group ofphysical servers that may be accessed via one or more networks, such asnetwork 120. As shown, the collaborative ticketing system 100 mayinclude various modules, components, data stores, and the like toprovide the ticketing, pricing, analysis, and other features describedherein. For example, the collaborative ticketing system 100 may include:an offer generation module 200 to generate pricing and offers; an ordermanagement module 202 to process user interactions and configure orders;an invitation generation module 204 to generate and manageuser-initiated or automatically-initiated event invitations; a userprofiling module 206 to determine user preferences based on orderhistory, system usage, and/or various other factors; a social connectionmodule 208 to identify social connections and recommend friends; apreview management module 210 to enable event production entities todefine previews (e.g., content and survey questions) and facilitatepresentation of the previews to users; and a reporting module 212 togenerate and provide reports regarding system 100 usage, userpreferences, offer performance, etc. In addition, the collaborativeticketing system 100 may include various data stores, such as: an eventsdata store 220 to store information about events (e.g., movies, concerttours, and the like offered by event providers 102); a venues data store222 to store information about venues (e.g., movie theaters, concerthalls, sporting stadiums etc.); an offers data store 224 to storeinformation about offers, pricing, and the like; an order data store 226to store information about pending and/or finalized orders; a users datastore 228 to store user profile and preference information; a usagehistory data store 230 to store information about system usage, such asusage of client-side application interactions (e.g., click streaminformation regarding interactions performed at user devices 112, suchas interactions with the mobile ticketing application 114) orserver-side applications (e.g., web page requests); a content data store232 to store event-related content, such as previews, and informationsolicited about the content; and a reviews data store 234 to store userreviews and other information regarding events attended by the users. Insome embodiments, the collaborative ticketing system 100 may includefewer, additional, and/or alternative additional modules, components,data stores, and the like that those illustrated in FIG. 2. For example,the collaborative ticketing system 100 may include a web server thatserves event-related content and/or an interface accessible via browserapplications on user devices 112.

The collaborative ticketing system 100 may be a single computing device,or it may include multiple distinct computing devices, such as computerservers, logically or physically grouped together to collectivelyoperate as a server system. The components of the collaborativeticketing system 100 can each be implemented as hardware, such as aserver computing device, or as a combination of hardware and software.In addition, the modules and components of the collaborative ticketingsystem 100 can be combined on one server computing device or separatedindividually or into groups on several server computing devices. In someembodiments, the features and services provided by the collaborativeticketing system 100 may be implemented as web services consumable viathe communication network 120. In further embodiments, the collaborativeticketing system 100 is provided by one more virtual machinesimplemented in a hosted computing environment. The hosted computingenvironment may include one or more rapidly provisioned and releasedcomputing resources, which computing resources may include computing,networking and/or storage devices. A hosted computing environment mayalso be referred to as a cloud computing environment.

FIG. 3 shows an example user device 112 according to some embodiments.The user device 112 may be any of a wide variety of computing devices,including personal computing devices, terminal computing devices, laptopcomputing devices, tablet computing devices, electronic reader devices,mobile devices (e.g., mobile phones, media players, handheld gamingdevices, etc.), wearable devices with network access and programexecution capabilities (e.g., “smart watches” or “smart eyewear”),wireless devices, set-top boxes, gaming consoles, entertainment systems,televisions with network access and program execution capabilities(e.g., “smart TVs”), and various other electronic devices andappliances. Individual user devices 112 may execute a so-called “thickclient” application and/or a “thin client” application (such as abrowser application) to communicate with other computing systems, suchas the collaborative ticketing system 100, venue kiosks 106, and thelike.

As shown, a user device 112 may have various modules and components thatfacilitate or provide the features described herein, including a display300, such as a video output display to provide a graphical userinterface, show ticketing information, etc., and a mobile ticketingapplication 114 to facilitate the various collaborative ticketingfunctions described herein. The mobile ticketing application 114 mayinclude or otherwise have access to: a usage history data store 302 tostore information about user interactions with the graphical userinterface associated with collaborative ticketing and/or userinteractions with the device in general; a location module 304 such as aglobal positing system (“GPS”) antenna and corresponding components todetermine the current geographic location of the user device 112; amessaging module 306 to receive notifications from the collaborativeticketing system 100, communicate with other users, and the like; agraphical user interface (“GUI”) module 308 to generate and manage userinteractions with an interface for browsing offers and previews,purchasing tickets, and the like; a group event processing or orderingmodule 310 to handle order and invitation configuration andfinalization; and an event preview module 312 to present event previews,obtain user feedback, provide information regarding rewards, etc. Insome embodiments, a user device 112 may include fewer, additional,and/or alternative modules, components, and/or data stores than thoseillustrated in FIG. 3.

FIG. 4 shows an example venue kiosk 106 according to some embodiments.The kiosk 106 may be or include a computing device, such as a tabletcomputing device or some other computing device with one or morecomputer processors, a memory with executable instructions, networkconnectivity, and various input/output devices. For example, the kiosk106 may include a display 400 to prompt users with instructions and/orprovide information, and a sensor 402 to scan tickets and/or receivedata from a user device 112. In addition, as shown, the venue kiosk 106may include various modules components and data stores, such as acheck-in module 404 to manage user check-ins, and a concession module404 to determine concession information for display and to generatenotifications (e.g., to a concession stand) regarding the user'sarrival, the user's concession order, or the like. In some embodiments,a venue kiosk 106 may include fewer, additional, and/or alternativeadditional modules, components, and/or data stores than thoseillustrated in FIG. 4.

Sample Interactions and Data Flows

FIGS. 5, 6, 7, and 8 show example interactions between user devices 112,a collaborative ticketing system 100, an event provider server 102, avenue management server 104, and/or a venue kiosk 106. The interactionsand data flows shown in FIGS. 5-7 are illustrative interactions and dataflows that may occur during or in connection with ticket pricing, ordergeneration, order finalization, ticket redemption, and/or various otherprocesses. For example, the interactions and data flows shown in FIGS.5-7 may be performed in connection with the processes 900 and 1000 shownin FIGS. 9 and 10. The interactions and data flows shown in FIG. 8 areillustrative interactions and data flows that may occur during or inconnection with providing event previews to users and obtaining userfeedback regarding the previews.

With reference to FIG. 5, a collaborative ticketing system 100 mayobtain event schedule data from one or more venue management servers 104at (A), and generate offers for event tickets and related items at (B).The schedule data obtained from venue management servers 104 may includeinformation regarding upcoming showings, ticket availability, concessionavailability, historical or desired pricing, etc. Such information maybe stored in the events data store 200, the venues data store 222, orsome other appropriate data store. In some embodiments, thecollaborative ticketing system 100 may also obtain, from event providerservers 102 (not shown in FIGS. 5-7), information regarding moviescurrently shown in theaters, information regarding historical or desiredpricing, etc. Such information may be stored in the events data store200 or some other appropriate data store. The collaborative ticketingsystem 100 may further maintain data (e.g., in the orders data store226) regarding prior ticket sales for particular movies and/or atparticular locations, sales for related movies, and the like. Thecollaborative ticketing system 100 may also maintain informationregarding user preferences, social connections, and the like (e.g., inthe users data store 228). The offer generation module 200 or some otherappropriate module or component of the collaborative ticketing system100 may use any or all of this information to forecast demand and setprices for ticket offers. The collaborative ticketing system 100 may usevarious statistical techniques, machine learning models, and/or othermethods to set prices. Illustratively, prices may be set to maximize orotherwise increase revenue based on expected demand and/or to maximizeor otherwise increase demand. Process 900 described below with respectto FIG. 9 is one example of a process that a collaborative ticketingsystem 100 may use to generate offers, price tickets, and the like.

A user wishing to purchase tickets to a movie or some other event canuse a user device 112 a to review offers generated by the collaborativeticketing system 100. The user device 112 a may include a mobileticketing application 114 provided by or otherwise associated with thecollaborative ticketing system 100 (e.g., a “thick client”implementation), a general web browser application (not shown) to accessa web server or application server that is part of or associated withthe collaborative ticketing system 100 (e.g., a “thin client”implementation), some combination thereof, etc. Upon applicationinitialization or login, or in response to some other event, the userdevice 112 a may provide a user or account identifier (such as anidentifier of the user, application used by the user, or the user device112 a) to the collaborative ticketing system 100 at (C). In addition,the user device 112 a can provide location data to the collaborativeticketing system 100. For example, the user device 112 a may include alocation module 304 (e.g., a GPS antenna and corresponding componentry)that determines the current location of the user device 112 a (e.g.,latitude and longitude coordinates of the user device 112 a), and theuser device 112 a may provide such data, or data derived therefrom(e.g., a zip code, location name, etc.) to the collaborative ticketingsystem 100.

The collaborative ticketing system 100 can use the location informationto determine which movies are currently showing at theaters near theuser and determine the ticket offers for individual showings at (4). Thecollaborative ticketing system 100 may also obtain information about themovies (e.g., previews, reviews, ratings, etc.) so that such informationcan be provided to users in order to facilitate the process of choosingfrom multiple movies, offers, etc. The information may have beenpreviously obtained by the collaborative ticketing system 100 and cachedsuch that it can be quickly provided to user devices 112, or theinformation may be obtained in response to receipt of a user requestsuch that the most up-to-date information may be obtained.

In some embodiments, the collaborative ticketing system 100 candetermine which friends of the user might be interested in the movies orindividual showings available near the user's current location. Thecollaborative ticketing system 100 can then recommend friends and othersocial network contacts that the user may consider inviting to aselected showing. For example, the social connection module 208 mayaccess various social network services with which a user is associated(e.g., has an account), and add the user's contacts from the individualsocial network services to a data store (e.g., the users data store228). In this way, the mobile ticketing application 114 or collaborativeticketing system 100 can access an aggregated contact directory for theuser to provide listings of available contacts for group outings, torecommend contacts for group outings, etc. The social network contactsidentified by the social connection module 208 do not need to be friendsof a user on a social network service (e.g., as managed by a socialnetwork server 110), but may include other people with whom the userattends movies, other users of the collaborative ticketing system 100,etc. For example, the social connection module 208 may analyze previousorders 226, usage history 230, and/or other information associated withthe user and the user's friends and other social connections. The socialconnection module 208 can identify friends with whom the user typicallyattends movies generally, friends with whom the user typically attendsmovies having particular characteristics (e.g., genres, actors, etc.),friends with whom the user may not have attended a movie recently,friends showing interest in movies currently showing or movies withcharacteristics similar to those currently showing, etc. The socialconnection module 208 may use any or all of this and/or otherinformation to determine friend recommendations for the user.

At (5), the collaborative ticketing system 100 can provide to the userdevice 112 a the offers and friend recommendations determined above anddescribed in greater detail below. In some embodiments the collaborativeticketing system 100 may not provide friend recommendations with offers,by may instead provide friend recommendations after a user selects anoffer, or the collaborative ticketing system 100 may not provide friendrecommendations at all. Process 1000 described below with respect toFIG. 10 is one example of a process that a collaborative ticketingsystem 100 may use to provide offers and friend recommendations to usersbased on the users' current locations, preferences, previous usage,social connections, and the like.

Using the user device 112 a, the user can view the movie information andoffers, and select a showing at (6). The user may also browseconcessions or other event-related items for pre-purchase, as describedin greater detail below with respect to FIG. 9. In addition, the usermay select friends that the user wishes to invite to the selectedshowing. The friends may be selected from a contact list kept by theuser, from the user's social network profile, from recommendationsprovided by the collaborative ticketing system 100, or some combinationthereof. In some embodiments, the price that the user is charged for aticket is based at least partly on the friends, invited by the user,also purchasing tickets. For example, the user (and, in some cases, eachfriend) may get a discount based on the number of friends that purchasetickets in response to the user's invitations. As another example, theuser (and, in some cases, particular friends) may get a discount basedon which friends purchase tickets in response to the user's invitations.Certain friends may be more likely to influence other invited friends topurchase tickets, or to influence additional users altogether topurchase tickets (e.g., users who may not have been invited or who maynot be socially connected to the current user). If the current userinvites such an influential friend and that friend subsequentlypurchases a ticket (and, in some cases, causes other users to purchasetickets), the current user may get an additional discount, reward, orother compensation. As a further example, the user or all participantsin a group outing may obtain upgraded tickets or other benefits based onthe number of tickets purchased by the group as a whole for the event(e.g., the user or all members of the group may get upgraded seats forthe same price they were going to pay for the original seats, the useror all members of the group may get free or upgraded concessions, etc.).The ordering module 310 or some other appropriate component of the userdevice 112 a can select or generate information to purchase the offerand generate the invitations, and can provide such information to thecollaborative ticketing system 100 at (7).

In some embodiments, the user may wish to invite friends to a movie, butmay also wish to provide multiple (e.g., two or more) options from whichthe user's friends can select. For example the user may wish to see amovie on a particular day or around a particular time, but may beflexible with respect to the particular movie. As another example, theuser may wish to see a particular movie, and may be flexible withrespect to date or time such that the user may attend the movie withfriends at a time that is convenient for the most friends, or forcertain friends. These and other examples may be handled through the useof a poll. The user may use user device 112 a to select two or moreoffers, select friends to poll, and submit the poll. The ordering module310 or some other appropriate component of the user device 112 a canselect or generate information defining the poll, such as informationidentifying the movie options, users invited to participate in the poll,the poll deadline, etc. The ordering module 310 can provide suchinformation to the collaborative ticketing system 100 at (7).

With reference to FIG. 6, the collaborative ticketing system 100 canprocess the order information received from user device 112 a andgenerate invitations at (8). For example, process 1000 described belowwith respect to FIG. 10 is one example of a process that thecollaborative ticketing system 100 may use to process orders receivedfrom user devices.

The collaborative ticketing system 100 can provide invitations toinvited users at (9). Each invited user may be associated with one ormore user devices, such as mobile phones, laptop computers, and thelike. The collaborative ticketing system 100 can provide invitationsdirectly to the user devices 112 b-112 z, such as by communication witha thick-client application executing on user devices 112 b-112 z (using,e.g., a push notification to the mobile ticketing application 114), byproviding a text message or device-addressable message (e.g., a messageprompting the user to view the invitation and including a link to athick-client application or a thin-client address), etc. In someembodiments, the collaborative ticketing system 100 may provideinvitations to user-based addresses rather than specific client devices.For example, the collaborative ticketing system may send an email, add amessage to a message center accessible via a thin-client, etc. Thespecific messaging channels used to send invitations to individual usersmay be determined on a user-by-user basis, such as via user-configurablepreferences stored in the users data store 228.

The invited friends may use user devices 112 b-112 z to view and act oninvitations at (10). If the invitation is an invitation to purchase aticket, a receiving user can purchase the ticket. Information about thepurchase can be submitted to the collaborative ticketing system 100 at(11). The users may also browse concessions or other event-related itemsfor pre-purchase, as described in greater detail below with respect toFIG. 9. If the invitation is an invitation to vote in a poll, areceiving user can submit a vote. Information about the vote can besubmitted to the collaborative ticketing system 100 at (11).

The collaborative ticketing system 100 can finalize the orders or pollat (12). If the invitation was an invitation to vote in a poll, thevotes can be tallied and the winning showing or other event can bedetermined. Notifications may be sent to the user devices 102 a-102 z,or just to the originating user device 102 a. The users may be promptedor enabled to purchase tickets for the wining showing. In someembodiments, the users who voted for the winning showing mayautomatically have orders entered on their behalf, and other remainingusers may be prompted or enabled to purchase tickets. The collaborativeticketing system 100 can also determine final pricing for the orders.For example, the collaborative ticketing system 100 may reduce pricesbased on the number of users purchasing tickets, as described above.

The collaborative ticketing system 100 can provide order information toa venue management server 104 at (13). The order information may includeticket identifiers, such as bar codes, quick response (“QR”) codes, orother unique identifiers that the venues can use to validate usertickets at check-in. The order information may also include informationabout concessions pre-purchased by the users.

With reference to FIG. 7, an illustrative embodiment will be describedin which a user can check in at an event using a venue kiosk 106. Inresponse, concessions and other event-related items pre-purchased by theuser can be prepared for pickup before or while the user is on the wayto the concession stand or other pickup location. As shown, thecollaborative ticketing system 100 can provide event ticketing data tothe venue kiosk 106 at (A). The event ticketing data may include ticketidentifiers, such as QR codes or other unique identifiers that thevenues can use to validate user tickets for particular showings. Eventticketing data may also include information about the userscorresponding to the tickets so that the kiosk may display personalizedmessages, as shown in FIG. 4. In some embodiments, the event ticketingdata may be provided to a venue management server 104 instead of thevenue kiosk 106 (as described above with respect to FIG. 5) and thevenue management server 104 may provide appropriate data to the venuekiosk 106.

The collaborative ticketing system 100 can provide concession data tothe venue management server 104 at (B). The concession data may indicatewhich concessions and/or other event-related items have beenpre-purchased. The concession data may also include user and/or ticketidentifiers such that the individual concession orders can be tied to aunique user.

At (C), a user may check in at the venue kiosk 106. The user device 112a may display ticketing information that can be presented at the venueto gain access to the vent. For example, the user device 112 may displayencoded information, such as a code, QR code, or some other uniqueidentifier as shown in FIG. 3. The encoded information may correspond toa ticket to the event purchased by the user of the device 112 a (e.g.,an encoded identifier of the ticket that can be decoded by a kiosk 106and validated against ticket information provided by the collaborativeticketing system 100). In some embodiments, the encoded ticketinginformation may include concession information regarding concessionsthat have been pre-purchased in connection with the ticket. For example,a concessions order can either be encoded in the QR code itself orstored at the collaborative ticketing system 100, venue managementserver 104, etc. If the concession information is stored on a server(e.g., collaborative ticketing system 100, venue management server 104,etc.) then the information encoded in the QR code may include areference or identifier for looking up the concession information on theserver.

The kiosk 106 may include an optical sensor 402 or some other componentcapable of reading the identifier displayed by the client device 112 tocontrol entry to the event, venue, etc. The kiosk 106 may verify theticket identifier using previously-received ticketing information and,upon successful verification, indicate the successful check in to theuser. The kiosk 106 may also have access to information regarding whichfriends of the user have already checked in. For example, ticketinginformation received by the kiosk 106 may also link tickets or userstogether based on the invitations, polls, offers, and the like describedabove to facilitate the presentation of such friend check-in data. Insome embodiments, the kiosk 106 may receive friend check-in informationfrom another source, such as the collaborative ticketing system 100. Insuch cases, the kiosk 106 may display friend check-in informationregarding friends that may not have been part of the invitation, poll,or offer with which the current user purchased a ticket. In this way,users can catch up with friends whom they did not know would be at theevent. Users may set user-configurable privacy settings to indicatewhether their presence at an event is to be displayed to other users inthis manner.

In some embodiments, ticketing information may not be provided to thevenue kiosks 106 prior to user check-ins. In such cases, venue kiosks106 may verify that a user has purchased a valid ticket by querying thecollaborative ticketing system 100 after the user provides the ticket(e.g., after the user's QR code is scanned). In some embodiments, usersmay check in using other methods, such as near-field communications,radio frequency identifiers (“RFIDs”), fingerprint scanners, opticalscanners, or any other appropriate method. In some embodiments, a usermay check in using a user device 112 alone, rather than checking in at akiosk 106. For example, location data provided by the location module304 of the user device 112 may be provided to the venue managementserver 104, collaborative ticketing system 100, or some other system toverify that the user has arrived at the venue, to determine whether theuser is within a threshold distance of the venue, will arrive within athreshold period of time, etc. In such cases, a notification may begenerated to concessions personnel to begin preparing concessions whenthe user is within the threshold distance or will arrive within athreshold period of time. The user may also actively submit check-ininformation, such as by clicking a button or performing some other userinterface operation with the user device 112 that confirms check-in orotherwise causes a notification to be sent to the venue managementserver 104, collaborative ticketing system 100, or some other system.

The concession management module 406 or some other appropriate module orcomponent of the venue kiosk 106 can provide a concession preparationnotification or check-in notification at (E). The notification may benotification specifically related to preparation of pre-purchasedconcessions, and may be provided to a venue management server 104. Insome embodiments, the notification may be a check-in notification to thevenue management server 104, and the venue management server 104 mayhave knowledge of pre-purchased concessions or may obtain informationregarding pre-purchased concessions from the collaborative ticketingsystem 100.

The venue management server 104 can cause presentation of the concessionnotification information (or related information) associated with theuser or ticket to appropriate personnel (e.g., display a notification ona screen, play an audible tone or text-to-speech presentation, print apaper notification, etc.). Concession personnel can then prepare thepre-purchased concessions such that the concessions will be ready forpick up when the user arrives at the concession stand, or shortlythereafter. In some embodiments, concessions may be prepared and a usermay be notified at (F) when the concessions are available for pickup.

In some embodiments, users may order concessions or other event-relateditems independently of purchasing tickets. For example, a user maybrowse event-related item offerings on the user device 112, and purchasethe items during the event. The user device 112 may send informationregarding the purchase directly to the venue management server 104 orvia the collaborative ticketing system 100. When the items are ready tobe picked up, a notification can be generated to the user device 112. Insome embodiments, the items may be delivered to the user at the event.For example, the venue management server 104 may locate the user basedon ticketing information (e.g., seat/row numbers automaticallydetermined based on the user's ticket), seating information provided bythe user (e.g., seat/row numbers entered into the mobile ticketingapplication 114 by the user), geographic location information providedby the user device 112 (e.g., GPS coordinates determined by a GPScomponent of the user device 112), wireless networking triangulation, orthe like.

After attending the movie or other event, the user may submit a reviewor other related information at (G). For example, the user may record avideo or audio review, submit a text-based review, answer questionsdefined by the movie studio or theater, etc. Data reflecting therecorded or entered review, answered questions, etc. can be stored orgenerated by the user device 112 and transmitted to the collaborativeticketing system 100. In some embodiments, the collaborative ticketingsystem 100 may prompt the user to submit a review after the event. Forexample, the collaborative ticketing system 100 has informationregarding the user check-in at the showing. The collaborative ticketingsystem 100 may wait a predetermined or dynamically determined period oftime, or determine that the user is leaving the venue based on locationinformation provided the user device 112, etc. The collaborativeticketing system 100 can then prompt the user for a review.

The review may include information about events depicted in the movie(e.g., important plot developments) that other users may not wish toknow about prior to seeing the movie (“spoilers”). The user submittingthe review may indicate that the review contains spoilers (e.g., byselecting a particular user interface option, by including a “spoiler”keyword, etc.). An indication may then be shown to other users warningthem of the spoiler, or the review may be obscured when shown to otherviewers and an option may be given to the other viewers to be shown thereview contents (instead of showing the review contents by default). Insome embodiments, other users reading a review may tag the review ascontaining a spoiler (e.g., by selecting a user interface option). Uponreceipt of one (or a threshold number) of such “spoiler” tags for agiven review, the collaborative ticketing system 100 and/or application114 may implement various options, such as obscuring the reviewcontents, indicating the review contains a spoiler, etc., as describedabove.

In some embodiments, users may select pre-generated tags to describe themovie or to indicate qualities of the movie. For example, users maychoose one or more descriptive words or phrases, such as “actionpacked,” “fun,” “funny,” “romantic,” “dark,” “disappointing,”“thrilling,” etc. Subsequent users (e.g., friends of the users who havechosen the tags, or users of the system 100 in general) may then beshown a listing of the top-chosen tags and, in some cases, correspondingselection frequencies or percentages. Alternatively or in addition,users may post such tags to social networking sites, microbloggingsites, etc. from within the application 114 or outside of theapplication 114. The collaborative ticketing system 100 may access suchtags, even when posted outside of the application 114, and compile themfor viewing by other users as described above. Illustratively, the tagsmay be “hashtags.”

With reference to FIG. 8, a collaborative ticketing system 100 mayobtain event previews from event provider servers 102, and solicitfeedback from users regarding the previews. Illustratively, the previewsmay be movie trailers provided by the movie studios distributing themovies to theaters. The movie studios may wish to obtain feedbackregarding the effectiveness of different version of trailers, theinterest of different types of users in the trailers, the interest ofusers in trailers for particular movies with respect to others, etc.

At (1), an event provider server 102 can provide one or more eventpreviews to the collaborative ticketing system 100. In addition, theevent provider server 102 can configure the type of feedback to besolicited in connection with the preview, the type of users from whichto solicit the feedback, etc. Information regarding such configurationmay be referred to as feedback configuration information. In someembodiments, the collaborative ticketing system 100 may provide a userinterface with which to define such feedback configuration, such as a“thick client” application or a browser-based interface. Illustratively,a representative of a movie studio can access the interface, uploadvideo files of trailers, define or select the questions that users areto be asked or the feedback that is to be solicited, and/or selectincentives or rewards to be provided to users (e.g., free/discountedtickets or concessions, movie club points, etc.). Thus, the system ordevice that provides the event preview and feedback configurationinformation does not need to be a “server,” but may instead be anycomputing device, such as a personal computer, tablet computer, mobilephone, etc.

At (2), the preview management module 210 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can determine orselect sources of feedback for the preview. The sources of feedback maybe a selection of users with particular characteristics (e.g.,demographic characteristics, application 114 usage histories, orderhistories, event interests, prior event attendance, etc.) defined by orselected by the event provider server 102. In some cases, the feedbacksources may be chosen based on criteria determined by the collaborativeticketing system 100, or may be randomly selected by the collaborativeticketing system 100.

At (3), the preview management module 210 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can provide thepreviews to user devices 112 a-n, corresponding to the users selectedabove, and solicit feedback from the users of the devices 112 a-n. Insome embodiments, users of the user devices 112 a-n may view previewsand provide feedback in return for discounts, movie club points, andother incentives. The users may access a portion of the application 114(or browser-based interface) and request previews to watch. Thecollaborative ticketing system 100 can select the previews for theparticular user based on the feedback configuration, random choice, etc.as described above, and provide them to the user. In some embodiments,the collaborative ticketing system 100 may actively solicit feedbackfrom the users. For example, the collaborative ticketing system 100 maytransmit messages (e.g., text messages, email messages, pushnotifications, alerts displayed with in the application 114, etc.) thatalert the users to new previews. As another example, the collaborativeticketing system 100 may transmit previews and feedback solicitationinformation (e.g., questions) to the user devices 112 a-n when theapplication 114 or collaborative ticketing system 100 determines thatthe user devices are idle, connected to a Wi-Fi connection, etc.

At (4), the applications 114 (or browser-based interfaces) executing onthe user devices 112 a-n can present event previews and obtain feedbackfrom users. The feedback may be the form of one or more questions (e.g.,“Do you think this movie will be funny? What genre does this movie fitinto? Would you see this movie? Will you go to see this movie on openingnight? If so, would you like to reserve a seat now?”) In someembodiments, the feedback may be in the form of free-form text, aselection of which movie/preview was best, a ranking or rating themovies/previews, etc. In some embodiments, the users may be askedpreliminary questions, such as whether they know the identities of themain actors (e.g., the application 114 may display photos of the mainactors and ask a user to identify one or more of the actors), whetherthe user has ever heard of the movie, whether the user saw the previousinstallment in the series, whether the user has seen competitor movies,what types of movies the user likes, etc. Based on any of the theseand/or other factors, a particular preview may then be chosen to showthe user (e.g., movie studios may perform A-B testing in which users areshown one of multiple different versions of a particular preview or oneof multiple different previous for a particular movie, and thensolicited for feedback regarding the particular version/preview thateach saw).

At (5), the applications 114 (or browser-based interfaces) can providefeedback information to the collaborative ticketing system 100reflecting user responses to the previews. In some embodiments, thefeedback information may include additional information, such ascontextual information (e.g., information regarding what the user did inthe application 114 before and/or after watching the preview andproviding feedback), orders (e.g., ticket purchases and/or group outingsinitiated for the movies previewed), etc.

At (6), the preview management module 210 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can aggregate andprocess the feedback information received from multiple user devices 112a-n. Feedback information may be anonymized, summarized, or otherwiseprocessed in a way that can be useful to event providers withoutsacrificing the privacy of the users. In some embodiments, the feedbackinformation is not anonymized. For example, if a user opts-in toproviding personally identifiable information, then the feedbackinformation provided to event providers may include user profileinformation collected and generated by the collaborative ticketingsystem 100, information about the user's social connections, etc. Thepreview management module 210 or some other module or component of thecollaborative ticketing system 100 can provide the information to theevent provider server 102 at (7).

Information generated during the preview process described herein may beused by the application 114 and/or collaborative ticketing system 100 inother ways. For example, positive and negative feedback regardingparticular previews or types of previews may be used when generatinguser-specific offers, as described in greater detail below. As anotherexample, the collaborative ticketing system 100 may automaticallygenerate invitations, or recommend a list of movie candidates from whicha user may select to initiate a group outing, recommend a list of groupmember candidates from which a user may select to initiate a groupouting, etc. The automatically generated invitations or recommendationsmay be based on feedback provided regarding previews (e.g., a user gavepositive feedback regarding similar movies or movies starring the sameactor or directed by the same director), user-indicated interest inparticular movies (e.g., a user answered “yes” to “Do you plan on seeingthis movie when it is released?”), feedback provided by other users(e.g., candidate users), etc.

Sample Offer Generation Process

FIG. 9 shows an illustrative process 900 for generating event offers.Advantageously, the collaborative ticketing system can use informationreceived from event providers and/or venues, information regarding prioroffers and orders, information regarding user interests and socialconnections, and/or other data or some combination thereof to generateevent offers. The offers may be generated to increase demand for events,increase revenues, etc.

The process 900 begins at block 902. The process 900 may be performed bythe offer generation module 200 or some other module or component of thecollaborative ticketing system 100. Illustratively, although the process900 will be described below with respect to a single offer generationmodule 200, the process 900 may be performed by multiple computerprocessors of a server computing device (“server”) or multiple servers,in parallel or asynchronously. For example, offer generation for eventsin different geographic regions may be performed by different servers orgroups of servers during off-hours (e.g., between 2:00 AM and 5:00 AM inthe respective geographic regions). As another example, offer generationfor different categories of events (e.g., different movie genres ordifferent types of entertainment events generally) may be performed bydifferent servers or groups of servers substantially in parallel, etc.

At block 904, the offer generation module 200 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can obtain orderinformation regarding previously-completed purchases. Thepreviously-completed purchases may include purchases of offers forpreviously-occurring events and/or upcoming events. The collaborativeticketing system 100 may store order information in the orders datastore 226 for orders occurring during some previous window of time, orindefinitely.

At block 906, the offer generation module 200 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can obtaininformation for upcoming events. The collaborative ticketing system 100may obtain such information from, e.g., event provider servers 102,venue management servers 104, independent event information servers 108,social network servers 110, and/or other sources. For example, thecollaborative ticketing system 100 may obtain information about moviesfrom the movie studios (via event provider servers 102) that havereleased or are releasing the respective movies, such as the titles,ratings, subject matter, actors, directors, pricing, previews and otherpromotional materials, etc. The collaborative ticketing system 100 mayobtain information about particular showings from the theaters oroperators of the theaters at which the showings will occur (via venuemanagement servers 104), such as scheduled dates and times of upcomingshowings, theater locations, internal theater numbers, pricing,available concessions, etc. The collaborative ticketing system 100 mayobtain third-party or independently-produced information about movies(via event information servers 108 and/or social network servers 110),such as reviews and other commentary.

At block 908, the offer generation module 200 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can project demandfor tickets to the various events for which it is generating offers. Theprojected demand may be based on any number of factors, such as previousticket purchases (e.g., for the same movie, for similar movies, etc.),information regarding the particular showings available (e.g., dates,times, locations, etc.), information regarding the interests of users ofthe system 100 (e.g., prior ticket purchases for similar movies, anexpressed interest in the particular movie for which demand is beingproject or in similar movies, interest shown by users located in thesame geographic region as the theaters, etc.), pricing objectivesprovided by the movie studios and/or theaters, price sensitivity ofusers who may be interested in the movie, and the like. As one example,ticket sales for a particular movie may be plotted on a curve, or afunction describing such a curve may be determined. The ticket sales fortoday, tomorrow, or some point in the future may be based on a value thecurve is expected to take on the respective day. This baselineprojection can be adjusted up or down based on other factors such as therelease of other movies, the occurrence of holidays, an expectedadditional increase or decrease due to the day of the week, etc. In someembodiments, information from event information servers 108 and/orsocial network servers 110 can reflect growing or waning interest in themovie outside of historical projections, and the projected demand can beadjusted accordingly. For example, the occurrence of some event, such asincreased commentary on social networks, an award nomination, or thelike may cause a surge in demand for tickets to a small-budget movienear the expected end of its theater run.

At block 910, the offer generation module 200 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can determineparameters for the ticket offers that it is generating. The parametersmay be based at least partly on any of the information or factorsdescribed above, such as projected demand, pricing targets, etc. In someembodiments, an offer may include any number of parameters in additionto the identity and time of the event for which the offer is beinggenerated. For example, an offer may include a base price thatcorresponds to the starting price of the tickets in connection with theoffer (which may in some cases be lower than the list price typicallycharged to customers for tickets independent of any special offer ordiscount) and a discount amount or function that corresponds to thediscount applied to offered tickets when friends also purchase tickets(such as a set discount amount or percentage for each additional friend,tiered discount levels that increase at one or more thresholds, etc.). Afloor price may also be determined, corresponding to the lowest amountthe tickets will be sold for in connection with the offer (such as theper-capita minimum to be paid to the movie studio, possibly includingsome additional amount or percentage to be paid to the movie theaterand/or charged by the provider of the system 100).

The offer parameters may be set to maximize an expected outcome withrespect to the number of ticket sales, total revenue, and/or totalprofits for a particular showing, particular day, particular film,particular theater, etc. For example, the base prices and/or incrementaldiscounts for additional friends may be set fairly aggressively forless-popular movies with matinee showings during weekdays, while thebase/price and/or incremental discounts may be set more conservativelyfor prime time weekend showings of popular new movies.

In some embodiments, the offer may include concessions or other items,services, or incentives bundled with one or more tickets, such as taxior other transportation services, restaurant reservations, and the like.The pricing of the tickets, concessions, and other items, services, orincentives may be adjusted to: maximize revenue and/or profits for oneor both; provide an incremental sale; meet pricing expectations (e.g.,per capita minimums of the movie studios and desired revenue percustomer for the theaters), etc. The user may be presented with a singleprice for the bundle, and the prices of individual components may bedynamically set by the offer generation module 200 to produce thedesired outcome. In addition to setting the prices of the individualcomponents to produce the desired outcome, the split of revenue betweenthe movie theater and movie studio for each component of the bundle maybe set to produce the desired outcome. Illustratively, the movie studiomay be given all revenues derived from tickets sold in connection withthe offer, and the movie theater may be given all revenues derived fromconcessions sold in connection with the offer. Thus, although the movietheater may be giving up some ticket-related revenue, it may beincreasing overall profits due to the incremental sale ofhigh-profit-margin concessions that may not otherwise have been sold. Inaddition, although the movie studio may take less than its typical percapita minimum requirement, it may nevertheless be increasing overallprofits due to the incremental ticket sale that may not otherwise havebeen made.

At block 912, the offer generation module 200 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can determineuser-specific recommendations. In some embodiments, user-specificprofile information, such as event interests, prior purchases, and thelike may be used to select offers to recommend to the user or to groupsof users. For example, users who may have expressed an interest in aparticular movie but never went to see the movie (e.g., the users wentto see other movies instead, or the users are price-sensitive and priormovie ticket offers were outside of their price range). A user-specificor group-specific recommendation may be made to such users to bringtheir attention to a potentially desirable offer, such as an offer thatis within a user's price range for a movie in which the user expressedinterest. The recommendation may be made in the form of a targetedmessage (e.g., an email or text), an advertisement displayed within theapplication 114, an option in a “recommendations” portion of theapplication interface 114, such as the wheel described in greater detailbelow, etc. In some embodiments, the offer may include recommendedfriends to invite to the movie, or the offer may be communicated to theentire group of recommended friends such that the group can see who hasreceived the recommended offer.

The offers generated according to the process 900 may be stored in anoffers data store 224 or some other appropriate data store of (oraccessible to) the collaborative ticketing system 100.

Sample Order Management Process

FIG. 10 shows an illustrative process 1000 for managing orders for eventtickets and other items. The process 1000 begins at block 1002. Theprocess 1000 may be performed by the order management module 202,invitation generation module 204, and/or some other module or componentof the collaborative ticketing system 100. Illustratively, althoughportions of the process 1000 will be described below with respect toexecution or performance by particular modules or components of thecollaborative ticketing system 100 (e.g., an order management module 202and an invitation generation module 204), the process 1000 or portionsthereof may be performed by additional, fewer, or alternative module orcomponents, multiple modules in parallel or asynchronously (e.g.,multiple computer processors of a server or by multiple servers), etc.

At block 1004, the collaborative ticketing system 100 can obtain useraccount information and current location information from a user device112. Illustratively, the user account information and/or currentlocation information may be obtained when a user launches the mobileticketing application 114 on a user device 112 and the mobile ticketingapplication 114 causes account information and/or location informationto be transmitted to the collaborative ticketing system 100. Thelocation information may include geo-location coordinates, a zip code,or some other data reflecting the current location of the user device112, an identifier or coordinates of a predefined “home” location forthe user, an identifier or coordinates of user-specified or queriedlocation, etc.

At block 1006, the order management module 202 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can determine offersto be provided to the user device 112. The offers may be determinedbased on the location information, the profile of the user associatedwith the account information obtained above, and the events availablenear the location indicated by the location information. Illustratively,venues (e.g., movie theaters) may be selected within a particulardistance or travel time of the current location of the user device 112.For example, the x closest venues (where x is any non-negative integer)from a distance or travel time standpoint may be selected. As anotherexample, certain venues may be excluded even though they meet thedistance/time criteria (e.g., because they are showing movies availableat theaters closer to the current location, because the user hasprovided unfavorable feedback regarding the venue, etc.). Certain venuesmay be added even though they do not meet the distance/time criteria(e.g., because they are showing movies of interest to the user that arenot showing at any closer theater, because they user has providedfavorable feedback or marked them as a “favorite theaters,” etc.). Insome embodiments, the order management may select offers based on theuser's indicated interests or profile data, based on the status of theoffer as an offer recommended for the user, etc.

At block 1008, the order management module 202 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can provide offerinformation to the user device, such as descriptions of the offers,promotional material associated with the offers, etc.

At decision block 1010, the order management module 202 or some othermodule or component of the collaborative ticketing system 100 candetermine whether an offer has been selected. If so, the process 1000can proceed to block 1012. For example, user selection of a particularoffer in the user interface described below may cause informationreflecting the selection to be transmitted to the collaborativeticketing system 100.

At block 1012, the order management module 202 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can determinewhether there are any friends to recommend for the currently selectedoffer. Illustratively, the recommended friends for a particular offermay be determined based on the current user's social connections,history of ordering tickets and attending movies with particular users,etc.

At block 1014, the order management module 202 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can providerecommended friend information to the user device 112. For example, theorder management module 202 can provide images of or associated with thefriends, information linking the friends to particular offers or movies,etc. The user device 112 may display such friend information to the useras described in greater detail below.

At decision block 1016, the order management module 202 or some othermodule or component of the collaborative ticketing system 100 candetermine whether an invitation has been created for the selected offer.If so, the process 1000 can proceed to block 1018. As described above,the invitation may be an invitation to a particular event or to purchasea particular offer, or the invitation may be an invitation toparticipate in a poll to select an event.

At block 1018, the order management module 202 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can identify orotherwise determine which concessions are available for the particularoffer, at the particular venue, etc. As described above, some offers mayinclude bundled concessions, and the bundled concessions can be added tothe current order. However, users may still purchase additionalconcessions if desired. In some embodiments, concessions may berecommended for a user. For example, the user may typically purchase aparticular concession or group of concessions (e.g., medium popcorn andmedium drink). The system can provide a recommendation of thoseconcessions, recommendations of other concessions that the user may beinterested in (e.g., based on an analysis of similar user provides),discounts on the typically-purchased concessions, discounts on largersizes of the typically-purchased concessions, etc.

At block 1020, the order management module 202 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can provide theconcession information to the user device 112. The concessioninformation may include descriptions, prices, images, special offers,etc.

At decision block 1022, the order management module 202 or some othermodule or component of the collaborative ticketing system 100 candetermine whether the order has been finalized for this particular user.If so, the user's payment may be authorized for the amount of the order,pending any possible discounts that may be applied if friends, invitedby the user, also finalize orders for the offer.

At block 1024, the order management module 202 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can store orderdata, such as data in the orders data store 226 indicating the offerselected, the amount pre-authorized, etc.

At block 1026, the invitation generation module 204 or some other moduleor component of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can generateinvitations to friends or other users selected to be invited asdescribed above and in greater detail below. The invitation generationmodule may reserve tickets for the invited friends for somepredetermined or dynamically determined period of time, or until theoccurrence of some event. For example, a user may set a period of timewithin which users should purchase tickets, and tickets for all invitedfriends (or some portion of invited friends) may be reserved until theexpiration of that period of time. In some embodiments, as alsodescribed in greater detail above, the invitation may be an invitationto participate in a poll rather than an invitation to a specific movie.

At decision block 1028, the order management module 202 or some othermodule or component of the collaborative ticketing system 100 candetermine whether any friends, invited by the current user, havefinalized orders. If so, the process 1000 can proceed to block 1030,where the orders for the users are updated to reflect the final price(e.g., a per-friend discount is applied). Alternatively, or in addition,if a poll was generated, the order management module 202 may total theresults of the poll and finalize orders for users that voted for thewinning event/offer (and other users that subsequently decide to attendthe winning event/offer).

At block 1032, the order management module 202 or some other module orcomponent of the collaborative ticketing system 100 can submit thefinalized order. In submitting the order, the order management module202 can finalize payment. In addition, as described above, thecollaborative ticketing system 100 can provide information about thetickets, concessions, and related purchases to the venue managementserver 104 for the venue that is hosting the event, to the venue kiosk106, etc.

Sample User Interface

Example user interface screens of one embodiment of the mobile ticketingapplication 114 will now be described with reference to FIGS. 11A-11C,12A-12C and 13A-13I. The user interface illustrated in these drawings isa touch-based interface designed to operate on a smartphone, tablet, orsimilar mobile device that includes a touch screen. The mobile ticketingapplication 114 generates the displayed screens and views usinginformation retrieved by the mobile application/device from the system100.

FIG. 11A illustrates a “navigation wheel” feature 1100 of the userinterface. The navigation wheel 1100 is an interactive display elementthat the user can rotate via a drag or swipe gesture to explore moviesshowing in the vicinity of the user. The movie featured at the center ofthe wheel (“Get On Up” in FIG. 11A) changes as the wheel is rotated.While viewing the wheel display, the user can swipe up on the screen toview show times for the displayed movie at a local theater (as shown inFIG. 11B), and can swipe to the right to see additional theaters andcorresponding show times.

If the user taps on the center of the wheel 1100 while a particularmovie is displayed, the user is presented with a movie-specific displayof the type shown in FIG. 11C. This movie-specific display indicates (1)which of the user's friends have indicated that they want to see thismovie, and (2) which friends have already seen it (and the averagerating assigned by these users). From this movie-specific display screenof FIG. 11C, the user can perform various actions, including (1)selecting “I saw it,” in which case the mobile application 114 promptsthe user to rate the movie, (2) selecting “I want to see it,” (3)selecting “plan an outing,” in which case the user enters into apipeline (described below) for planning an outing to see the movie, and(4) swiping the menu bar 1108 to the left to move from the “friends”view to views of show times, reviews, additional movie information, anda trailer.

Referring again to FIG. 11A, the wheel 1100 in this example is dividedinto four sections, each of which is represented by a respective icon onthe wheel. The size of each section is proportional to the number ofmovies or other events within that section. In addition, oralternatively, the size of each section may be proportional to thedegree of the user's interest in the movies or other events within thatsection (e.g., as determined based on prior ticket purchases, prioruser-expressed interest, prior user interactions with the mobileticketing application 114, user interactions with social networks,etc.). Sections for movies in which the user may be most interested maybe larger and correspond to more movies than other sections in which theuser may be relatively less interested in. For example, a “specialoffers” or “deals” section may be bigger (and have more items) if theuser is determined to be particularly price-sensitive, while a “newreleases” section may be bigger for users who are not price-sensitiveand who like to attend movies soon after they are released. As describedbelow, the number and types of sections displayed may be personalized bythe system 100 for the user. The arrow 1102 at the top of the wheel 1100points to the currently selected section. In FIG. 11A, the user isbrowsing the “new releases” section, which is represented by the flameicon 1104. The user can scroll through the various new releases byrotating the wheel in either direction within this section.

The icon 1106 represents a “recommendations for you” section. When thissection is selected, the user is presented with personalizedrecommendations of movies. These personalized recommendations arepreferably based, at least partly, on ratings assigned by the user toparticular movies. Other data reflective of the user's moviepreferences, such as the user's ticket purchase history and the moviepreferences of the user's friends, may additionally be considered.

The icon 1110 in FIG. 11A represents a “movies that your friends want tosee” section. This section is displayed on the wheel when at least oneof the available movies is a movie that a friend of the user hasdesignated as a movie they want to see. (The system automatically clearsa user's “I want to see it” designation if the user purchases a ticketfor the movie or indicates that they have seen it.) The user canefficiently discover movies that the user's friends want to see, anddiscover which friends want to see such movies, by browsing within thissection.

The icon 1112 in FIG. 11A represents “movie deals.” This section of thewheel displays movies for which one or more theaters are currentlyoffering a discount or special offer.

Various other sections may be displayed on the wheel 1100, includingsections corresponding to specific movie genres and categories (e.g.,kids movies) for which the user has exhibited a preference. The system100 may automatically select which sections to display to a user basedon the user's behaviors and/or based on explicit preferences specifiedby the user. A given movie may be included in multiple sections of thewheel.

FIG. 12A illustrates a screen for browsing movies by theater. The listedtheaters are arrange into the categories “favorites” (based on theuser's explicit designations of favorite theaters), “recently visited,”and “nearby.” The “recently visited” theaters may be determined by thesystem 100 based on ticket purchase histories and/or based on GPS-basedtracking of the mobile devices 112. The user can toggle from the listview shown in FIG. 12A to a map view as shown in FIG. 12B. The map viewshows the location of each nearby theater.

When the user selects a theater from the list view or map view, themobile application 114 displays a theater-specific view (FIG. 12C) forthe selected theater. This theater-specific view allows the user to viewthe theater's movies and associated show times, and enables the user to,among other actions, initiate the planning of an outing to the theater.As shown in FIG. 12C, the theater-specific view also displaysinformation about which friends want to see each movie and which havealready seen it.

In some embodiments, additional and/or alternative methods may be usedto search for movies, theaters, etc. For example, a user may typesuggestions into a search box, or a transcription of a user's utterancemay be entered into the search box. As the user types or speaks,filtered results may be presented that correspond to the search boxentry. Illustratively, the filtered results may be represented by movieart, such as promotional images provided by the respective movie studiosfor the films. In some embodiments, the movie art may be a still imageor other representation of a preview that can be viewed upon activationby a user.

FIGS. 13A-13H illustrate an example pipeline (screen flow) for planningan outing to see a selected movie at a selected theater, and alsoillustrates a use case example in which a user plans an outing and makesa purchase. The user can access the “plan an outing” pipeline fromvarious views, such as the movie-specific view of FIG. 11C. As shown inFIG. 13A, the user can tap on the plus and minus signs to increase ordecrease the number of tickets to be purchased. As shown in FIGS. 13Aand 13B, the price per ticket drops as the number of tickets increases.The outing summary section 1300 indicates the amount of the discount forvarious numbers of tickets.

In the illustrated embodiment, the discount depends not only on thenumber of tickets the user purchases, but also on the number of invitedfriends who accept the invitation to purchase a ticket. For example, andas shown later in this example (see FIG. 13H), the user may purchasethree tickets for his party and may invite two friends; in thisscenario, the user will pay $7.25 per ticket (the discounted amount fora group purchase of three) if neither friend accepts the invitation, $7per ticket if one friend accepts, and $6 per ticket if both friendsaccept. In some use case scenarios (not shown), the user interface mayalso present the user with other incentives for inviting friends; forexample, a free fountain drink or popcorn may be offered for reaching anouting size of four people.

In the screen shown in FIG. 13B, the user has opted to purchase threetickets for himself, as represented by the three images of the user'sface. In FIG. 13C, the user has scrolled down to access functionalityfor inviting one or more friends, and has selected one friend to invite.The user can select additional friends to invite by tapping on theimages of particular friends in either the “recommended” section 1304 orthe “friends” section 1306 below it, causing the selected friend's imageto be added to the outing summary section 1300. In some embodiments,once a friend has been added (as in FIG. 13C), the user can drag thefriend's image to the left into the shaded portion of the summarysection 1300, if desired, to indicate that the user will pay for thefriend's ticket. In the present example of FIGS. 13A-I, the user doesnot opt to pay for the tickets of any invited friends.

The friends shown in the “recommended” section 1304 may be selected bythe system 100 based on various criteria, such as (1) which friendscurrently have an “I want to see it” designation for the movie, (2)which friends have already seen the movie, as determined from theirticket purchases, ratings, and explicit indications that they have seenit, (3) which friends the user has previously invited (or invited themost frequently) through the system 100, and/or (4) the moviepreferences of the individual friends. As one example, the system 100may display in the “recommended” section 1304 all friends who have notyet seen the movie and who meet at least one of the followingconditions: (1) the friend has an “I want to see it” status for themovie, (2) the friend has previously been invited by the user to a movieouting via the system, (3) the friend's predicted affinity for themovie, as determined by a recommendation algorithm, exceeds a selectedthreshold. In some embodiments, the user interface may display, for eachrecommended friend, the reason(s) the friend was selected to recommend;for example, the user interface may display an indication, such as anicon, label, or other visual effect indicative of the reason. Theindication may be displayed by default, or it may be displayed when theuser double taps on the image of the recommended friend. An example of areason might be “Because John indicated that he wants to see thismovie,” or “Because John has given high ratings to other movies likethis one.”

As illustrated in FIG. 13C, a “recent groups” section 1308 enables theuser to invite a group of two or more friends. (The images of the groupsin this example our only partially visible, and would be fully visiblewhen the user scrolls down). The groups displayed in this section 1308,if any, are groups recently invited to a movie by the user (as trackedby the system 100). If the user taps on a group (not illustrated), allmembers of the group are added to the outing and displayed in summarysection 1300.

Once the user has finished selecting friends to invite, the user canselect the “next” button to proceed to the concessions view of FIG. 13D.From this view, the user can, if desired, select a concessions category.In FIG. 13E, the user has selected the “popcorn” category and hasselected three popcorn items to add to the order. As with ticketpurchases, the system may, in some embodiments, offer various types ofvolume discounts on concessions. The discounts on concessions, if any,may also depend on the number of tickets being purchased. Upon selecting“add” in FIG. 13E, the selected items are added to the order and anupdated concessions view (FIG. 13F) is presented.

In this use case example, the user selects “next” in FIG. 13F to proceedto the “review and confirm your order” view of FIGS. 13G and 13H. Thisview identifies the selected movie, the number of tickets beingpurchased by the user, the invited friends, and the selectedconcessions, and includes transaction information for completing thepurchase. The view also includes an “add a message” option (FIG. 13H)for the user to compose a message to the invited friends. The ordertotal ($40.85) in this embodiment is calculated based on non-attendanceof the invited friends, and is the amount used by the system 100 forseeking credit card authorization of the transaction. If one or bothinvited friends accept the invitation and purchase a ticket, the amountcharged to the user's credit card will be less than this amount (toreflect the increased volume discount).

FIG. 13I displays the messaging presented to the user once the userselects the “buy and invite” button to complete the transaction. Asindicated by the messaging, the user can later use the mobile ticketingapplication 114 to display a QR code at the theater. The QR codecontains encoded transaction information identifying the purchasedtickets and concessions, and thus allows the theater to process theorder (including preparing any concessions order upon the user'sarrival).

As further illustrated by the messaging in FIG. 13I, the system 100 alsosends invitation messages to the invited friends. In one embodiment,these invitation messages are sent as text messages or iMessages,although they may alternatively be sent by email or anothercommunications method. The invitation messages may be transmitted by thecollaborative ticketing system 100 to the invitees (the mobile ticketingapplication 114 may cause the collaborative ticketing system 100 to sendthe messages by, e.g., providing information or a notification to thecollaborative ticketing system 100 to do so), or they may be transmittedfrom a user device 112 to another user device 112 without being routedthrough the collaborative ticketing system 100. The message may includea link to a browser-based interface provided by the collaborativeticketing system 100 (e.g., a link to a web page), a link to launch theapplication 114 on the recipient's user device 112, etc. The followingis an example invitation message: “John Smith has invited you to seeFury at 7:15 tonight at AMC Century City with Valeen W & Elyse T. Joinhere: http://mov.ie/fesx.” When the invited friend selects the link,they are presented with a web page that provides an option to create anaccount with the service or to log into their existing account. In someembodiments, the application 114 may be launched or activated, and theuser may log in to the user's account via the application 114 or beautomatically logged into the application 114. The invited user is alsogiven the option to purchase a ticket. In one embodiment, if the invitedfriend purchases a ticket via the service's web site without using themobile ticketing application, the ticket (which includes a QR code) issent to the invited friend via a text message and/or email.

The user whom set up the group outing may view an interface (not shown)that displays which users have accepted invitations to the movie orcompleted an order for tickets. For example, the interface may includean image for each invited friend. Presentation of an image may bealtered to indicate that the corresponding friend has purchased tickets.Illustratively, the interface may show updates in real time orsubstantially real time, such as within seconds of a friend completing apurchase. In some embodiments, friends in receipt of an invitation to amovie may also see an interface that shows them which friends have beeninvited, which friends have accepted invitations or completed orders fortickets, etc.

A similar interface may also be shown when the invitation is aninvitation to participate in a poll. Images corresponding to individualfriends may be shown, and polling status may be indicated (e.g., whichmovie/showing they voted for, or whether they have voted at all). Forexample, a user may plan a night out by initiating a poll ofselected/recommended friends. The interface can prompt the user to picka date/time, select individual events (e.g., particular moviesgenerally, or individual showings of movies), sort/rank the events bythe user's attendance preference, etc. In some embodiments, thecollaborative ticketing system 100 can make smart recommendations foreach of the poll settings based on, e.g., who is being polled, locationof the user and/or friends, past application usage and other recordedbehaviors, current inventory, time of day, etc. The user (and,optionally, each polled friend or some subset thereof) may access ascreen or other interface that shows the current poll status, such aswhich friends have responded to the poll, which events they have votedfor, the events for which they indicated that they are available, thetime remaining before the poll closes, etc. When a poll closes, theprice of individual tickets can vary based on how many polled users(and/or which individual users) purchase tickets, as described in detailabove.

Although not illustrated in the example screen displays, the service mayalso include various features for facilitating the outing. For example,the service may effectively set up a private chat room through which theouting participants can post messages to each other. As another example,the mobile application may display arrival status information for eachmember of the group, as determined based on ticket scanning events atthe theater. As a further example, the mobile application may provide aninterface for arranging transportation, such as: providing optionsallowing group members to indicate their respective availability todrive and to select subsets of the group for carpools; providing optionsfor purchasing or viewing available public transportation; providingoptions for hiring transportation (e.g., taxi cabs, limousines, etc.);and the like. In some embodiments, users may track the location ofselected transportation methods via GPS data provided by respectivemobile phones or vehicles.

Terminology

Depending on the embodiment, certain acts, events, or functions of anyof the processes or algorithms described herein can be performed in adifferent sequence, can be added, merged, or left out altogether (e.g.,not all described operations or events are necessary for the practice ofthe algorithm). Moreover, in certain embodiments, operations or eventscan be performed concurrently, e.g., through multi-threaded processing,interrupt processing, or multiple processors or processor cores or onother parallel architectures, rather than sequentially.

The various illustrative logical blocks, modules, routines, andalgorithm steps described in connection with the embodiments disclosedherein can be implemented as electronic hardware, or combinations ofelectronic hardware and computer software. To clearly illustrate thisinterchangeability of hardware and software, various illustrativecomponents, blocks, modules, and steps have been described abovegenerally in terms of their functionality. Whether such functionality isimplemented as hardware, or as software that runs on hardware, dependsupon the particular application and design constraints imposed on theoverall system. The described functionality can be implemented invarying ways for each particular application, but such implementationdecisions should not be interpreted as causing a departure from thescope of the disclosure.

Moreover, the various illustrative logical blocks and modules describedin connection with the embodiments disclosed herein can be implementedor performed by a machine, such as a general purpose processor device, adigital signal processor (DSP), an application specific integratedcircuit (ASIC), a field programmable gate array (FPGA) or otherprogrammable logic device, discrete gate or transistor logic, discretehardware components, or any combination thereof designed to perform thefunctions described herein. A general purpose processor device can be amicroprocessor, but in the alternative, the processor device can be acontroller, microcontroller, or state machine, combinations of the same,or the like. A processor device can include electrical circuitryconfigured to process computer-executable instructions. In anotherembodiment, a processor device includes an FPGA or other programmabledevice that performs logic operations without processingcomputer-executable instructions. A processor device can also beimplemented as a combination of computing devices, e.g., a combinationof a DSP and a microprocessor, a plurality of microprocessors, one ormore microprocessors in conjunction with a DSP core, or any other suchconfiguration. Although described herein primarily with respect todigital technology, a processor device may also include primarily analogcomponents. For example, some or all of the signal processing algorithmsdescribed herein may be implemented in analog circuitry or mixed analogand digital circuitry. A computing environment can include any type ofcomputer system, including, but not limited to, a computer system basedon a microprocessor, a mainframe computer, a digital signal processor, aportable computing device, a device controller, or a computationalengine within an appliance, to name a few.

The elements of a method, process, routine, or algorithm described inconnection with the embodiments disclosed herein can be embodieddirectly in hardware, in a software module executed by a processordevice, or in a combination of the two. A software module can reside inRAM memory, flash memory, ROM memory, EPROM memory, EEPROM memory,registers, hard disk, a removable disk, a CD-ROM, or any other form of anon-transitory computer-readable storage medium. An exemplary storagemedium can be coupled to the processor device such that the processordevice can read information from, and write information to, the storagemedium. In the alternative, the storage medium can be integral to theprocessor device. The processor device and the storage medium can residein an ASIC. The ASIC can reside in a user terminal. In the alternative,the processor device and the storage medium can reside as discretecomponents in a user terminal.

For example, the processes 800 and 900 described with respect to FIGS.8-9 may be embodied in a set of executable program instructions storedon one or more non-transitory computer-readable media, such as one ormore disk drives or solid-state memory devices, of the user device 112or a computing system with which the collaborative ticketing system 100is associated. When a process 800 or 900 is initiated, the executableprogram instructions can be loaded into memory, such as RAM, andexecuted by one or more processors of the user device or computingsystem. In some embodiments, the computing system may include multiplecomputing devices, such as servers, and the processes or portionsthereof may be executed by multiple servers, serially or in parallel.

Conditional language used herein, such as, among others, “can,” “could,”“might,” “may,” “e.g.,” and the like, unless specifically statedotherwise, or otherwise understood within the context as used, isgenerally intended to convey that certain embodiments include, whileother embodiments do not include, certain features, elements and/orsteps. Thus, such conditional language is not generally intended toimply that features, elements and/or steps are in any way required forone or more embodiments or that one or more embodiments necessarilyinclude logic for deciding, with or without other input or prompting,whether these features, elements and/or steps are included or are to beperformed in any particular embodiment. The terms “comprising,”“including,” “having,” and the like are synonymous and are usedinclusively, in an open-ended fashion, and do not exclude additionalelements, features, acts, operations, and so forth. Also, the term “or”is used in its inclusive sense (and not in its exclusive sense) so thatwhen used, for example, to connect a list of elements, the term “or”means one, some, or all of the elements in the list.

Disjunctive language such as the phrase “at least one of X, Y, Z,”unless specifically stated otherwise, is otherwise understood with thecontext as used in general to present that an item, term, etc., may beeither X, Y, or Z, or any combination thereof (e.g., X, Y, and/or Z).Thus, such disjunctive language is not generally intended to, and shouldnot, imply that certain embodiments require at least one of X, at leastone of Y, or at least one of Z to each be present.

While the above detailed description has shown, described, and pointedout novel features as applied to various embodiments, it can beunderstood that various omissions, substitutions, and changes in theform and details of the devices or algorithms illustrated can be madewithout departing from the spirit of the disclosure. As can berecognized, certain embodiments described herein can be embodied withina form that does not provide all of the features and benefits set forthherein, as some features can be used or practiced separately fromothers. The scope of certain embodiments disclosed herein is indicatedby the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description. Allchanges which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of theclaims are to be embraced within their scope.

What is claimed is:
 1. A non-transitory computer readable medium havingstored thereon a mobile ticketing application configured to run on amobile device of a user, said mobile ticketing application comprising: auser interface module that provides a touch-based user interface on themobile device, the user interface providing functionality for the userto at least: browse movies and show times at theaters in a vicinity ofthe mobile device; select a movie and an associated theater and showtime; initiate a group event in connection with the selected movie,theater and show time, wherein initiating the group event comprisesselecting, from a display of social network contacts, a set of one ormore social network contacts to invite to the group event, wherein thetouch-based user interface provides functionality for the user to selectthe set of social network contacts by at least (1) tapping on adesignation of a plurality of social networking contacts previouslyinvited by the user as a group, whereby the user can select theplurality of social networking contacts to invite without individuallyselecting each of the plurality of social networking contacts, and (2)tapping on designations of individual social networking contacts; and agroup event processing module that is responsive to initiation of thegroup event by at least: initiating an electronic transmission of aninvitation to each selected social network contact, said invitationincluding a link to a server system that provides functionality for theinvited social network contact to accept the invitation; and generate,and display on the mobile device, an encoded display representing aticket for attending the group event, said encoded display includingencoded information corresponding to the group event, said encodeddisplay adapted to be scanned at the theater and used to control entryinto the theater.
 2. The non-transitory computer readable medium ofclaim 1, wherein the user interface displays a wheel that is rotatableby the user with a swipe gesture to browse the movies, wherein the wheelhas multiple sections, each of which corresponds to a differentrespective movie category.
 3. The non-transitory computer readablemedium of claim 2, wherein one of the sections of the wheel is arecommendations section that displays personalized movie recommendationsfor the user, said personalized recommendations based at least partly onratings assigned by the user to specific movies.
 4. The non-transitorycomputer readable medium of claim 1, wherein the user interfacedisplays, for at least some of the social network contacts, respectiveindications of whether the social network contacts have already seen theselected movie.
 5. The non-transitory computer readable medium of claim1, wherein the user interface displays, for at least some of the socialnetwork contacts, respective indications of whether the social networkcontacts have indicated an interest in seeing the selected movie.
 6. Thenon-transitory computer readable medium of claim 1, wherein the userinterface displays recommendations of social network contacts for thegroup event, the recommendations of social network contacts based on atleast one or more of the following: (1) which social network contactsthe user has previously invited to at least one group event, (2) whichsocial network contacts have indicated an interest in seeing the movie,(3) movie preferences of the social network contacts.
 7. Thenon-transitory computer readable medium of claim 1, wherein the mobileticketing application determines a price per ticket of the group eventbased at least partly on a number of attendees.
 8. A system thatprovides an event ticketing service, comprising: a mobile ticketingapplication that runs on mobile devices of users, the mobile ticketingapplication providing a touch-based user interface that includesfunctionality for a user to browse events at local venues, select anevent at a venue, select a set of one or more social network contacts toinvite to the selected event, and initiate a group outing to the event,wherein the touch-based user interface provides functionality for theuser to select the set of social network contacts by at least (1)tapping on a designation of a plurality of social networking contactspreviously invited by the user as a group, whereby the user can selectthe plurality of social networking contacts to invite withoutindividually selecting each of the plurality of social networkingcontacts, and (2) tapping on designations of individual socialnetworking contacts; and a server system that communicates with themobile devices and interacts with the mobile ticketing application, saidserver system storing service account information of users, and storinginformation regarding group outings initiated by users; wherein thesystem is responsive to initiation of the group outing by sending, toeach selected social network contact, an invitation message containinginformation about the selected event and a link for accessing the serversystem and joining the group outing; wherein the system is additionallyprogrammed to generate, for respective members of the group outing, anelectronic ticket comprising an encoded display that is adapted to bedisplayed on the mobile device of the member and scanned at the venue tocontrol entry into the venue.
 9. The system of claim 8, wherein thesystem is programmed to determine a monetary amount per ticket for thegroup outing based at least partly on a number of members of the groupouting.
 10. The system of claim 8, wherein the user interface furtherincludes functionality for the user to purchase, prior to the event andin connection with the group outing, one or more concession items forpick-up at the event.
 11. The system of claim 10, wherein the system isresponsive to scanning of the electronic ticket of the user at the eventby communicating an order for the one or more concession items toconcessions personnel at the venue.
 12. The system of claim 10, whereinthe system encodes information regarding the purchase of the one or moreconcession items in the electronic ticket generated for the user. 13.The system of claim 10, wherein the invitation message comprises a textmessage or an application notification.
 14. The system of claim 10,wherein user selection of the link causes activation of the mobileticketing application or activation of a browser application.